четверг, 29 февраля 2024 г.

Депутаты Приднестровья призвали Россию принять меры по защите региона


Депутаты Приднестровья призвали Россию принять меры по защите региона

Речь идет об экономической и гуманитарной, а не о военной помощи, заявили в Москве

Депутаты Приднестровья призвали Россию принять меры по защите региона
Фото: Гавриил Григоров/ТАСС

Москва. 28 февраля. INTERFAX.RU - Съезд депутатов всех уровней непризнанной Приднестровской Молдавской республики принял обращение в адрес Совета Федерации и Госдумы России с просьбой принять меры по защите Приднестровья в условиях давления со стороны руководства Молдавии.

"Принять обращение в адрес Совета Федерации и Государственной думы России с просьбой о реализации мер по защите Приднестровья в условиях усилении давления со стороны Кишинева с учетом факта постоянного проживания на территории региона более 220 тыс. граждан России и уникального положительного опыта российского миротворчества на Днестре, а также статуса гаранта и посредника в переговорном процессе", - говорится в итоговой декларации съезда, созванного по инициативе лидера Приднестровья Вадима Красносельского.

Съезд обвинил Молдавию в "развязывании экономической войны против Приднестровья и намеренном создании предпосылок для многомиллионного дефицита бюджета".

По мнению делегатов съезда, "Кишинев намеренно блокирует переговоры и уклоняется от политического диалога на уровне высшего руководства сторон. Кишинев отказался от исполнения почти всех ранее достигнутых соглашений с Приднестровьем".

"На Приднестровье оказывается социально-экономическое давление, что прямо противоречит европейским принципам и подходам в области защиты прав человека и свободной торговли. (...) Молдавия приняла закон о сепаратизме, создав предпосылки для уголовного преследования буквально каждого гражданина Приднестровья. Приднестровцы подвергаются дискриминации и произволу при пересечении границы Молдавии", - говорится в документе.

Форум также решил принять обращение в адрес генерального секретаря ООН "с просьбой учесть неотъемлемые права приднестровского народа, гарантированные международными нормами, пресечь нарушение Кишиневом прав и свобод жителей Левобережья и не допустить провокаций, ведущих к эскалации напряженности".

Согласно документам форума, Тирасполь также обратится в адрес ОБСЕ с призывом "повлиять на руководство в Кишиневе с целью возвращения к адекватному диалогу в рамках международного переговорного процесса".

Со своей стороны пресс-секретарь правительства Молдавии Даниэль Водэ назвал съезд депутатов всех уровней Приднестровья "пропагандистским событием". Он заявил, что "нет опасности эскалации и дестабилизации ситуации в этом регионе Молдавии" в связи с проведением съезда.

Комментарии депутатов Госдумы и сенаторов РФ

Между тем первый зампредседателя комитета Госдумы по международным делам Алексей Чепа заявил, что обращение всех депутатов Приднестровья к российским парламентариям подразумевает, в первую очередь, экономическую помощь. "Мы, в первую очередь, говорим об оказании экономической помощи", - сказал Чепа "Интерфаксу" в среду.

Он отметил, что речи об оказании военной помощи не идет.

"Мы проинформированы об этой ситуации в определенной степени. Я думаю, меры предпринимаются и будут предприниматься дальше", - добавил парламентарий.

По его мнению, "это обращение будет способствовать более быстрому принятию решений с нашей стороны".

Со своей стороны, первый зампред комитета Совета Федерации по международным делам Владимир Джабаров сказал "Интерфаксу", что в верхней палате изучат это обращение и подумают над вариантами реагирования. Сенатор предположил, что Совет Федерации мог бы участвовать в оказании гуманитарной помощи Приднестровью.

"Я пока рассматриваю это с точки зрения гуманитарной, потому что вопрос политический я бы пока вывел за скобки", - отметил он.

В любом случае, полагает он, помощь должна быть оказана, особенно учитывая то, что в непризнанной республике проживает порядка 220 тысяч граждан РФ.

"Надо помочь этим гражданам, которые сейчас могут подвергнуться блокаде со стороны Киева и Кишинева. А как помогать, будем думать. Надеюсь, что такое обращение, а может быть, будет и какое-то заявление с нашей стороны, немножко отрезвит (президента Молдавии - ИФ) Санду, которая ведет откровенную антиприднестровскую политику", - сказал Джабаров.



https://www.interfax.ru/world/948131

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Stories from the UN Archive: Leap year events from UN history


UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan (centre) briefing correspondents at UN Headquarters in 2004. (file)

Stories from the UN Archive: Leap year events from UN history

UN Photo/Evan Schneider
 
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan (centre) briefing correspondents at UN Headquarters in 2004. (file)


28 February 2024

UN Affairs

It’s leap year, which gives February a 29th day only once every four years. This #ThrowbackThursday, we’re looking at what has happened on 29 February in UN history.

From expanding indigenous peoples’ seats at the UN table to appointing an Israeli-Palestinian orchestra co-founded by renowned scholar Edward Said as a UN Global Advocate for Cultural Understanding, here is a peek at some of what happened on this day across the decades.

Zanzibar, which became independent on 10 December 1963, was admitted as the 112th UN Member State. (file)
UN Photo/Yutaka Nagata
 
Zanzibar, which became independent on 10 December 1963, was admitted as the 112th UN Member State. (file)

1964: Zanzibar signs on to World Health Organization

The UN World Health Organization (WHO) accepted memberships from nations and territories in every region of the world. After all, in 1964, there were 115 UN Member States and dozens of colonies yet to achieve independence.

Zanzibar, an island in the Indian Ocean off the coast of Africa, became independent of British rule and joined the UN as its 112th Member State in December 1963. On 29 February in 1964, the country submitted its application for WHO membership. That followed Tanganyika’s WHO application in 1962, which came after the East African nation fought for independence from the British the previous year.

While the two countries held separate UN and WHO memberships at the time, by the end of April 1964, Zanzibar and Tanganyika became a single UN Member State, merging to become the United Republic of Tanganyika and Zanzibar. By November that year, the country was renamed the United Republic of Tanzania.

The heavily damaged buildings of the city of Tyre in southern Lebanon after an attack by the invading Israel forces in 1978. (file)
UN Photo/John Isaac
 
The heavily damaged buildings of the city of Tyre in southern Lebanon after an attack by the invading Israel forces in 1978. (file)

1984: Soviet Union vetoes draft to send UN force to war-torn Lebanon

The veto is a power vested in the UN Security Council’s five permanent members – China, France, Russia, United Kingdom, United States. On this day in 1984, the Soviet Union, now Russia, vetoed a Security Council draft resolution that would have called up a UN force to assist Government of Lebanon, which had been embroiled in a civil war that ended up spanning 1975 to 1990.

Tabled by France, the draft resolution would have had the Council “issue an urgent appeal for an immediate ceasefire and the cessation of all hostilities through Lebanon”. In addition, and in agreement with the Government, it would have constituted immediately, under its authority, “a UN force composed of personnel furnished by Member States other than the permanent members of the Security Council and selected, if appropriate, from contingents of the UN Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL)”.

The UN force would have been mandated to monitor compliance with the ceasefire and help to protect civilian populations, including in Palestinian refugee camps. While the draft was vetoed, the Council renewed UNIFIL’s mandate in April 1984 and has, annually, ever since.

Portrait of the members of the Thunderbird American Indian Dancers group, who participated in launching the International Year of Indigenous Peoples  at UN Headquarters in 1993. (file)
UN Photo/John Isaac
 
Portrait of the members of the Thunderbird American Indian Dancers group, who participated in launching the International Year of Indigenous Peoples at UN Headquarters in 1993. (file)

1996: UNGA expands fund for indigenous peoples’ seats at the UN table

On this day in 1996, the General Assembly adopted a resolution to expand the mandate of the UN Voluntary Fund for Indigenous Populations, created a decade earlier.

The original purpose of the fund was to financially assist representatives of indigenous communities and organizations to participate in meetings pertaining to them. The fund’s scope has expanded eight times since its inception, including to provide assistance to attend the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues in 2001, an expert mechanism on their rights in 2008 and Human Rights Council sessions in 2010.

In 2013, the Assembly adopted a name change for the initiative, which is now called the UN Voluntary Fund for Indigenous Peoples. Contributions between January 2020 and May 2022 totalled $1.9 million, according to its latest report, with Canada being the largest donor, contributing almost $470,000 in 2022.

The UN Security Council votes to authorize the deployment of  a multinational force to Haiti in 2004. (file)
UN Photo/Evan Schneider
 
The UN Security Council votes to authorize the deployment of a multinational force to Haiti in 2004. (file)

2004: Security Council deploys multinational force to Haiti

A night meeting of the Security Council authorized the immediate deployment of a multinational interim force to Haiti, on 29 February 2004.

Acting in response to a deteriorating political, security and humanitarian situation, the 15-member Council adopted resolution 1529. The multinational force was mandated to deploy for a period of three months to help secure the capital, Port-au-Prince, and other areas of the country.

In June, the Council established the UN Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH) to take over from the multinational force, which operated in the country until 2017.

2016: Israel-Palestinian orchestra newest UN advocate for cultural understanding

On this day in 2016, the UN Secretary-General appointed the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra as a UN Global Advocate for Cultural Understanding.

Speaking to press with co-founder and UN Messenger of Peace maestro Daniel Barenboim, the Secretary-General said that the orchestra’s every performance is a testimony to the power of music to break down barriers, to promote cultural understanding and to build bridges between communities.

Mr. Barenboim founded the orchestra in 1999 with world renowned Palestinian scholar and musician Edward Said, who died in 2003. The goal was simple: unite young musicians from Israel and Arab countries to foster dialogue and people-to-people diplomacy.

The 100th anniversary of Afghanistan’s independence was celebrated in Kandahar and across the country in August 2019. (file)
UNAMA/Mujeeb Rahman
 
The 100th anniversary of Afghanistan’s independence was celebrated in Kandahar and across the country in August 2019. (file)

2020: UN welcomes United States-Taliban deal

On this day in 2020, the United States and the Taliban announced their peace treaty in Qatar.

The deal included guarantees to prevent groups hostile to the US from operating on Afghan soil and for a timetable for the withdrawal of all foreign forces from Afghanistan, where US troops and their allies had been deployed since 2001, shortly after the 11 September terrorist attacks in the United States.

UN Secretary-General António Guterres commended efforts to achieve a “lasting political settlement” in the country, reiterating the UN commitment to support the people and the Government of Afghanistan.

UN forces left Afghanistan in August 2021. The Taliban seized power shortly thereafter.

#TBT leap days

A leap year takes place roughly every four years, when an extra day is added to the Gregorian calendar. That extra day is tacked onto the end of our shortest month, February, and the 29th is known as “leap day”. The next one will be in 2028, but the next time #ThrowbackThursday happens on a leap day, it will be 2052!

Every #TBT, UN News is showcasing epic moments across the UN’s past, cultivated from UN Photo and UN Audiovisual Library’s 49,400 hours of video and 18,000 hours of audio recordings in the Stories from the UN Archive series. Visit UN Video’s playlist here and our accompanying series here.

Join us next Thursday for another dive into history.



https://news.un.org/en/story/2024/02/1147047

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среда, 28 февраля 2024 г.

Security Council hears Gaza famine 'almost inevitable' unless aid is massively scaled up


A wide shot of the UN Security Council chamber as members meet on the protection of civilians in armed conflict.
UN Photo
A wide shot of the UN Security Council chamber as members meet on the protection of civilians in armed c

Security Council hears Gaza famine 'almost inevitable' unless aid is massively scaled up

 Humanitarian Aid

Well over half a million Gazans are just a step away from famine, said senior UN humanitarians, briefing the Security Council Tuesday on food security in the stricken enclave. The deputy head of UN aid coordination told ambassadors that famine is "almost inevitable" unless aid can be scaled up immediately.

5:33 PM: That's it from the Security Council this Tuesday when the dire aid situation and increasing  threat of famine was front and centre during an impassioned discussion in the chamber, led off by a detailed UN humanitarian update via videolink.

Children wait to receive food in the city of Rafah, southern Gaza.
© UNICEF/Abed Zagout
Children wait to receive food in the city of Rafah, southern Gaza.

HIGHLIGHTS

  • A trio of briefers from the key UN aid agencies issued grim warnings to the Council on the situation facing civilians tonight on the ground in Gaza
  • “If nothing changes, a famine is imminent in northern Gaza,” warns the World Food Programme (WFP) deputy executive director
  • At least 576,000 people are “facing catastrophic levels of deprivation and starvation” across the enclave, according to deputy chief of the UN humanitarian agency, OCHA
  • FAO’s deputy director says “essential first steps in eliminating a risk of famine” are a cessation of hostilities and restoration of humanitarian space to deliver lifesaving aid and restored basic services, like water and electricity
  • Some Council members proposed action plans to potentially end hostilities beginning with an immediate ceasefire and hostage releases
  • Algeria’s ambassador accused Israel of using starvation as a tool of war
  • For summaries of UN meetings, visit our colleagues at the UN Meetings Coverage in English and French

5:28 PM

You cannot stay silent: Arab Group

On behalf of the Arab Group, Tunisia Permanent Representative Tarek Ladeb said the spectre of famine looms in Gaza because of the inability of the international community to agree on an immediate ceasefire and the stubbornness of Israel, the occupying power.

Hundreds of humanitarian aid trucks are piled up along the entry points without being able to enter the Gaza. This blockade silently starves and deprives the Palestinian people of all means of survival in flagrant violation of international law and international humanitarian law, he said.

The international community and the Security Council cannot remain silent any longer.

He told ambassadors the Arab Group reiterates the need to adopt an immediate ceasefire and to put an end to the plan of forced displacement of Palestinians from Gaza.

The group also insists on the essential role UNRWA plays on the ground and warns against any attempt to broaden the mandate of the United Nations coordinator to the detriment of the Palestine refugee relief agency.

5:14 PM

Plans to open more border crossings: Israel

Israel’s Deputy Permanent Representative, Brett Jonathan Miller, said his delegation is committed to improving humanitarian assistance in Gaza, easing the entry of aid at the Kerem Shalom and Rafah crossings, with further border crossing openings also under discussion.

Brett Jonathan Miller, Deputy Permanent Representative of Israel, addresses the UN Security Council  meeting on the protection of civilians in armed conflict.
UN Photo/Manuel Elías
Brett Jonathan Miller, Deputy Permanent Representative of Israel, addresses the UN Security Council meeting on the protection of civilians in armed conflict.

Indeed, there is “no limit” to the amount of aid that can be sent to the population of Gaza, he said, noting that most aid requests are approved.

“These are the facts; no one can claim otherwise,” he said, adding that 20 bakeries in Gaza now produce more than two million pita breads a day.

Claims made to the contrary inside the Council Chamber are just attempts to propagate Hamas lies and to distract attention away from the inability to efficiently distribute aid, he continued.

Israel is not holding up the trucks waiting at the borders, he said, adding that, clearly, the delays in aid delivery are the UN’s fault. 

In this vein, he said the problem of aid diversion in Gaza cannot be ignored. For its part, Israel will continue to demand the release of all hostages, he said, calling on the Security Council to do everything in its power to ensure their safety and wellbeing.

4:50 PM

Famine already underway: Palestine

Permanent Observer of the State of Palestine Riyad Mansour told ambassadors that in reality, a famine is underway in Gaza and getting worse every day that Israel carries on its “criminal aggression”.

"We must stop for a moment and consider what this truly means," he said.

“What it means to forage for food in the rubble, sand and trash, to eat animal feed or food ravaged by rats.”

He said Israel was the architect of this human and humanitarian catastrophe, which it has purposely designed to collectively punish Gaza’s 2.3 million Palestinians. 

That this catastrophic famine and genocide has been allowed to happen at all and continue for this long "brings shame on all of us, not least this Security Council", Mr. Mansour added.

Riyad Mansour, Permanent Observer of the State of Palestine to the United Nations, addresses the UN Security Council meeting on the protection of civilians in armed conflict.
UN Photo/Loey Felipe
Riyad Mansour, Permanent Observer of the State of Palestine to the United Nations, addresses the UN Security Council meeting on the protection of civilians in armed conflict.

Israel’s weaponization of food to punish the Palestinian people is not a secret. It was declared months ago, in October 2023 by the highest-ranking Israeli Government and military officials, some of whom publicly stated that such policies would hasten the decline of humanitarian conditions and provoke a mass exodus from Gaza or a so-called “voluntary migration” of this “demographic threat”.

This Council must uphold its responsibilities, he said. 

Rectifying the current abhorrent situation requires three immediate steps: a ceasefire now to halt the Israeli aggression; the unimpeded, accelerated delivery of humanitarian aid at scale throughout all of Gaza; and accountability measures for all the war crimes and crimes against humanity perpetrated by Israel. 

4:48 PM

Heated exchanges between US and Russia

Following Russia's statement, the Russian and US delegates exchanged heated comments, with Mr. Wood saying that Russia was in no position to criticize any country while Moscow continues to bomb Ukraine.

Replying, Mr. Nebenzia said the US should be ashamed of itself, trying to compare the situations in Gaza and Ukraine.

Noting that Washington had invaded Iraq and other countries, the Russian ambassador proposed that “we do not turn the Security Council into a duel between the United States and the Russian Federation”.

4:34 PM

Russia: Council could adopt sanctions

Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia of the Russian Federation addresses the Security Council  meeting on the protection of civilians in armed conflict.
UN Photo/Loey Felipe
Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia of the Russian Federation addresses the Security Council meeting on the protection of civilians in armed conflict.

Russian Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia said reading the "white note" from UN humanitarians “makes your blood run cold”, adding that the current situation includes massive shortages and diseases running rampant through Gaza. 

There is no issue concerning the availability of aid, he added, as Council members saw for themselves during a visit to the Rafah crossing some weeks ago.

However, due to bureaucratic obstacles, delays have ensued, and ongoing hostilities make food self-sufficiency impossible.

An immediate ceasefire is the only way to prevent famine in Gaza along with ensuring that Israel complies with international law, the ambassador said. 

Unfortunately, the United States has blocked efforts to stop the violence in Gaza, and its proposed draft is yet another “license to kill”, he said, calling on Council members to reject the proposal. Indeed, it may be time for the Council to consider adopting sanctions, he said.

4:08 PM

‘Stop fighting immediately’: UK proposes 3-step plan

United Kingdom Ambassador Barbara Woodward said to address the desperate situation in Gaza, three things need to happen, beginning with a call for all parties to the conflict to stop fighting immediately.

Ambassador Barbara Woodward of the United Kingdom addresses the Security Council  meeting on the protection of civilians in armed conflict.
UN Photo/Manuel Elías
Ambassador Barbara Woodward of the United Kingdom addresses the Security Council meeting on the protection of civilians in armed conflict.

“This is crucial to get aid in and hostages out,” she said, adding that progress can then be made towards a sustainable and permanent ceasefire.

Second, she continued, the Council should urge Israel to allow more aid into Gaza and to facilitate distribution throughout the Strip. 

That covers the need for more crossings, open for longer, including Kerem Shalom and Nitzana, in addition to unencumbered access for aid coming from Jordan and the full opening of Ashdod Port, she said, underscoring that aid airdrops cannot substitute for land-based delivery, and humanitarians need safe and unhindered access to the north through the Erez crossing now.

Finally, she said, the UN and humanitarian partners need greater protection and access to the tools needed to accomplish their mission. In this vein, she called for an immediate pause in fighting then progress towards a sustainable ceasefire.

The UN agency warnings voiced in the Council show there must be action "now", she said, as "this is the only way to avert famine and alleviate suffering."

4:05 PM

France: Blocking humanitarian access is ‘unjustifiable’

French Ambassador Nicholas de Rivière said “the lack of sufficient humanitarian access to a population in an absolute humanitarian emergency is unjustifiable.”

With Jordan, France carried out yesterday a new airdrop of id directly to Gaza as well as a new shipment of humanitarian cargo to support Egyptian hospitals, he said.

Ambassador Nicolas de Rivière of France addresses the UN Security Council meeting on the protection of civilians in armed conflict.
UN Photo/Manuel Elías
Ambassador Nicolas de Rivière of France addresses the UN Security Council meeting on the protection of civilians in armed conflict.

At the same time, France’s President highlighted the extreme urgency for concluding an agreement on a ceasefire which guarantees the protection of all civilians and the massive entry of emergency aid.

France reaffirms its firm opposition to a ground offensive in Rafah, which would lead to another unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe, he stated.

“As we call for a ceasefire, France reiterates that all hostages must be released immediately and unconditionally, as required by our Council resolutions 2712 and 2720,” he said. “The Council must also be able to clearly condemn the terrorist attacks and sexual violence used as weapons of war by Hamas and other terrorist groups on 7 October. It must also call for a decisive step in the construction of a two-State political solution.”

4:00 PM

China: Israel must open all aid access

Ambassador Dai Bing, Deputy Permanent Representative of China, said Palestine refugee agency UNRWA is the “lifeline” for the people in Gaza.

Expressing support for the UN’s independent, impartial investigation, he said Israel should cooperate in that regard. Meanwhile, the international community, and particularly the major donors, must promptly resume funding for the UN agency.

For more than one month, aid supplies into Gaza have been halved, he continued. In this regard, he called on Israel to open all land, sea and air access routes to ensure the unimpeded delivery of aid. 

At the same time, a ceasefire is needed, he said, adding that China will continue to work towards efforts to resolve the conflict in Gaza and achieve peace in the Middle East.

3:54 PM

‘Israel must do more’: US

Deputy Permanent Representative Robert A. Wood of the United States addresses the UN Security Council  meeting on the protection of civilians in armed conflict.
UN Photo/Manuel Elías
Deputy Permanent Representative Robert A. Wood of the United States addresses the UN Security Council meeting on the protection of civilians in armed conflict.

Deputy Permanent Ambassador for the US Robert Wood

The US has urged Israel to keep border crossings open, meet humanitarian needs at scale and support the rapid and safe delivery of relief across all of Gaza.

“Simply put, Israel must do more,” he said, expressing profound concern for the wellbeing of more than one million Gazans stuck in the border city.

He said it was “unconscionable” that Hamas fighters were continuing to embed themselves among civilian buildings such as hospitals and schools, reiterating the call for all parties to uphold international humanitarian law.

No Rafah offensive

A major ground offensive should not proceed in Rafah “under the current circumstances”, he spelt out.

He said the US had worked tirelessly to get more aid into Gaza since the start of the war, pressing to open Israel’s Kerem Shalom crossing. 

He added the US had called consistently for the protection of humanitarians operating throughout Gaza and called on Israel to improve deconfliction coordination.

“We also recognize the fearless efforts of UN humanitarian workers who work under great personal danger to meet the humanitarian needs of those inside Gaza.”

He reiterated that it was essential to release the more than 130 hostages still being held inside the enclave, promising the US would continue to work towards a hostage deal along with a temporary ceasefire.

3:38 PM

Israel uses starvation as a tool of war: Algeria

Algeria’s Ambassador Amar Benjama said the people of Gaza are facing a harrowing dilemma of being forced to decide between the immediate threat of perishing during the bombings or enduring an agonizing demise due to starvation. 

Israel is using starvation as a tool of war, and Council resolutions are proving to be ineffective on the ground, he said.

“The ongoing attack on Gaza is not a war against Hamas; it is a collective punishment for the Palestinian civilian people. Our silence grants a license to kill and starve the Palestinian population. This Council must urgently call, demand for a ceasefire as our inaction equals complicity in this crime,” he said.

3:20 PM

Record levels of child malnutrition: WFP

Carl Skau, World Food Programme (WFP) Deputy Executive Director, said the Famine Review Committee has warned of a real prospect of famine by May, with 500,000 people at risk if the threat is allowed to materialize. Today, food aid is required by almost the entire population of 2.2 million people.

“Gaza is seeing the worst level of child malnutrition anywhere in the world,” he said. One child in every six under the age of two is acutely malnourished.

WFP is ready to swiftly expand and scale up operations if there is a ceasefire agreement. Immediate action is required to enable a huge increase in the volume of food and other humanitarian supplies.

Carl Skau (on screen), WFP’s Deputy Executive Director and Chief Operating Officer, briefs the UN Security Council  meeting on the protection of civilians in armed conflict.
UN Photo/Loey Felipe
Carl Skau (on screen), WFP’s Deputy Executive Director and Chief Operating Officer, briefs the UN Security Council meeting on the protection of civilians in armed conflict.

“We need a safe and functioning operating environment for humanitarian staff, the port of Ashdod and the Karni crossing to be open, a working humanitarian notification system and a stable communications network,” he said.

If nothing changes, a famine is imminent in northern Gaza. Meanwhile, in the south of Gaza, WFP and partners are on the ground, delivering food as it comes to shelters, to makeshift camps, and to shops.

“But, we are unable to provide regular or sufficient food to people who badly need it, he said. “The fact remains that without safe and greatly expanded access, aid workers cannot mount a relief operation at the scale required to reverse the severe humanitarian crisis now gripping Gaza.

“It is essential we avert a famine, and this requires much more than just food supplies. Basic services must also be restored, including health services, electricity networks and water and sanitation pipelines," he said, adding that UNWRA is the only organization with the ability to oversee and manage this vital infrastructure in Gaza.

3:10 PM

Mass destruction of food system: FAO

Maurizio Martina, Deputy Director General of FAO

“The key findings are troubling,” he warned, providing a sample of the severe impact of the war, from a decimated fishing sector, which provided livelihoods for over 100,000 Gazans, to the widespread death of livestock from airstrikes or the lack of water and fodder.

As of 15 February, 46.2 per cent of all cropland was assessed to be damaged, he said, emphasizing that agricultural infrastructure has been devastated, with the highest levels of destruction including sheep and dairy farms.

Maurizio Martina (on screen), Deputy Director General  of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), briefs the UN Security Council  meeting on the protection of civilians in armed conflict.
UN Photo/Loey Felipe
Maurizio Martina (on screen), Deputy Director General of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), briefs the UN Security Council meeting on the protection of civilians in armed conflict.

Over one quarter of wells had been destroyed, with destruction most significant in north Gaza and Gaza City, and 339 hectares of greenhouses had been destroyed, most severely in Gaza City, north Gaza and Khan Younis. The harvest of olives and citrus fruits, which provides an important source of income, has been heavily impacted by the hostilities.

Meanwhile, restrictions on aid deliveries had rendered impossible meaningful humanitarian operations, he said.

Restore humanitarian space

A cessation of hostilities and restoration of humanitarian space to deliver multisectoral assistance and restore services are “essential first steps in eliminating a risk of famine”, Mr. Martina said.

“A critical priority is to restore safe and sustained humanitarian access throughout the Gaza Strip and to all those in need of lifesaving assistance,” he said.

In addition, basic services must be restored, including cross-border water pipelines, telecommunications, electricity distribution and health facilities, he said.

“All parties must respect their obligations under international humanitarian and human rights law and protect civilians,” Mr. Martina said, adding that an immediate ceasefire and peace are a prerequisite for food security.

3:09 PM

Concluding his briefing, OCHA's Mr. Rajasingham said: "Food security experts warn of complete agricultural collapse in northern Gaza by May if conditions persist, with fields and productive assets damaged, destroyed or inaccessible. Many have had little choice but to abandon productive farmland due to evacuation orders and repeated displacement.”

The hostilities have caused widespread shortages, heavy damage to water infrastructure and scarcity of products and even opportunities to fish alongside rising hunger and the looming risk of famine, he said, calling for solutions to scale up humanitarian aid deliveries

Famine is 'almost inevitable' without action

Ramesh Rajasingham (on screen), Head and Representative of OCHA in Geneva and Director of the Coordination Division, briefs the UN Security Council  meeting on the protection of civilians in armed conflict.
UN Photo/Loey Felipe
Ramesh Rajasingham (on screen), Head and Representative of OCHA in Geneva and Director of the Coordination Division, briefs the UN Security Council meeting on the protection of civilians in armed conflict.

“The stark reality, however, is that a response at the level required will be impossible without immediate and concerted action by the parties, the Security Council, other Member States and the wider international community,” he said, adding that the white note submitted to members sets out recommendations for this action.

At this stage, very little will be possible while hostilities continue and while there is a risk that they will spread into the overcrowded areas in the south of Gaza, he said, reiterating the call for a ceasefire.

“If nothing is done, we fear widespread famine in Gaza is almost inevitable and the conflict will have many more victims,” he said.

3:03 PM

Guyana hold the presidency of the Security Council for February and their Permanent Representative Carolyn Rodrigues-Birkett has just gavelled the meeting open. 

‘Complete agricultural collapse’ looms by May in northern Gaza

OCHA deputy chief Ramesh Rajasingham told ambassadors the situation in Gaza was grave with practically the entire population left to rely on “woefully inadequate humanitarian food assistance to survive.”

He said there was every chance, the situation would simply get worse.

“Military operations, insecurity and extensive restrictions on the entry and delivery of essential goods have decimated food production and agriculture,” he added. 

2:30 PM - The UN humanitarian affairs coordination office, OCHA, said in information formally submitted on 22 February to ambassadors – known as a white note – that at least 576,000 people were “facing catastrophic levels of deprivation and starvation” across Gaza.

The briefing is happening under the Council’s agenda item on protecting civilians in armed conflict. The Deputy Director of OCHA is due to speak alongside the deputy heads of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and World Food Programme (WFP).

Guyana and Switzerland, who are the Council focal points on conflict and hunger, called for the meeting along with Algeria and Slovenia in response to the alarm raised by OCHA.

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The official system used by the UN and many other relief agencies to measure food insecurity (the IPC

Famine risk, wasting among children

The white note says at least 576,000 are close to famine, adding that the figures are conservative, and the risk of famine is growing every day that the war and obstacles to humanitarian relief continue.

The Global Nutrition Cluster reported on 18 February that around one in six children under age two are now experiencing wasting, the most life-threatening form of malnutrition.

Steps towards a ceasefire

Intense fighting continues between Israeli forces and Palestinian militants. Amid repeated calls to end the hostilities, negotiations are continuing between the warring parties, overseen by Qatar, which are aimed at securing a deal for a ceasefire and sequenced release of more hostages still being held in Gaza, according to news reports.

Meanwhile at UN Headquarters, it is being reported that the United States has circulated a revised draft resolution to Security Council members calling for a temporary ceasefire in Gaza along with hostage releases as soon as possible and for Israel to refrain from any invasion of Rafah “under current circumstances”.

The US vetoed the last resolution put forward by Algeria demanding an immediate humanitarian ceasefire on 20 February, arguing it would destabilize substantial talks going on in Qatar,

Lifesaving aid barriers

Just last week, the UN’s Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process briefed the Council, while medical charity Médecins Sans Frontières reported that a pattern of attacks by Israeli forces against hospitals and other civilian buildings, together with humanitarian personnel and convoys, was “either intentional or indicative of reckless incompetence”.

Briefing reporters in New York ahead of the Security Council meeting, UN Spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric said there were multiple factors holding up the aid effort, primarily the lack of ceasefire, “a lack of respect for international law…a breakdown of law and order in Gaza” and a simple lack of trucks to move vital supplies.

“There has been very little, if any, effective coordination with Israeli authorities on deconfliction”, and the ability to move convoys to the north, he added.

Find our latest story on the humanitarian effort here.



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UN Syria envoy appeals for urgent de-escalation across the Middle East


Children in northwestern Syria stay in a reception centre after their homes were bombed.
© OCHA/Bilal Al Hammoud
 
Children in northwestern Syria stay in a reception centre after their homes were bombed.


27 February 2024
Peace and Security

Fallout from conflict in the Middle East and ongoing fighting in Syria are having a devastating impact on civilians inside the country, UN Special Envoy Geir Pedersen told the Security Council on Tuesday. 

Regional spillover is only the latest accelerant to a conflict that is growing in complexity and with each passing year. The situation is worsening on almost all indicators and the status quo is unsustainable and unmanageable,” he said.

Airstrikes and casualties

Multiple airstrikes attributed to Israel were carried out this month in Syria, including on residential areas of Homs and Damascus, which reportedly resulted in civilian and military casualties, including advisors from Iran’s Revolutionary Guards. 

The United States also launched retaliatory strikes on dozens of Iran-linked targets in Syria and Iraq following a deadly drone attack on its troops in Jordan.   

“Meanwhile, all other vectors of the Syrian conflict itself continue, and remain the biggest cause of civilian casualties and displacement,” he said. 

The entire north of Syria has seen multiple frontline skirmishes this month. Exchanges of artillery, rocket and sniper fire, and pro-Government drone strikes along with strikes by the HTS fundamentalist militant group have also been reported, as well as Turkish drone strikes.

ISIL attacks also continued to rise, both in quantity and impact, particularly in the central and northeast regions, while southern Syria remains violent and unstable.

Geir Pedersen (on screen), Special Envoy of the Secretary-General for Syria, briefs the Security Council meeting on the situation in the Middle East.
UN Photo/Loey Felipe
 
Geir Pedersen (on screen), Special Envoy of the Secretary-General for Syria, briefs the Security Council meeting on the situation in the Middle East.

Support for Gaza ceasefire 

“Plainly the tensions in the region need to be urgently de-escalated, starting with the immediate humanitarian ceasefire in Gaza that the Secretary General has called for,” Mr. Pedersen said, while also underlining the urgent need for de-escalation in Syria.

He also called for the protection of civilians and civilian infrastructure, adding that “Security-Council listed terrorist groups must be fought in a manner that is cooperative and firmly in line with international law and that prioritizes the protection of civilians.”

Constitutional Committee 'hiatus' 

Mr. Pedersen also updated ambassadors on his efforts to convene the stalled Syrian Constitutional Committee, which brings together representatives from the Government, the opposition and civil society for meetings in Geneva.

The Committee last met in June 2022 and its ninth session, scheduled for last July, did not take place “because, as Russian Foreign Minister (Sergey) Lavrov confirmed this month, Russia no longer considers Switzerland a neutral venue, and the Syrian Government did not accept Geneva as a result.”

From the outset the Special Envoy has been clear that Geneva was the agreed location for meetings, per the Committee’s Terms of Reference, and “that the process should take place without foreign interference.”  Furthermore, as facilitator, he would explore all possible alternatives, and support the choice of another venue provided there was consensus. 

April meeting announced 

Although various venues were put forward, including his proposal of the UN Office at Nairobi, no consensus was reached.

“Having left no stone unturned to find an alternative venue, I believe the only way forward at this time is to reconvene in Geneva – at least as a bridging proposal while there is no consensus on an alternative venue, while also remaining open to an alternative venue for future sessions if consensus is found,” he said.

Mr. Pedersen announced that he was issuing formal invitations that day for a ninth round in Geneva in April.

“I believe it is important for the Constitutional Committee to meet as soon as possible and to continue its work. An indefinite hiatus can only undermine the Constitutional Committee’s credibility and work,” he warned.

Humanitarian situation deteriorates 

The Special Envoy also addressed the bleak humanitarian situation in Syria a year after deadly earthquakes that struck the north and neighbouring Türkiye, killing thousands and displacing millions. 

UN Emergency Relief Coordinator Martin Griffiths, who also briefed the Council, stressed that much more is still needed to address the long-term impact of the earthquakes and the wider humanitarian crisis in Syria, which has only deteriorated over the past 12 months.

Martin Griffiths, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, briefs on the humanitarian situation in the Middle East.
UN Photo/Loey Felipe
 
Martin Griffiths, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, briefs on the humanitarian situation in the Middle East.

Record needs 

He said a staggering 16.7 million people in Syria, nearly three-quarters of the population, now require humanitarian assistance – the highest number since the war started nearly 13 years ago.

Mr. Griffiths welcomed the Government’s recent decision to allow the UN to deliver aid to northwest Syria through two border crossings with Türkiye - Bab al-Salam and Al Ra’ee – for an additional three months, through 13 May.

The extension follows the equally welcome decision in January to extend permission to use the Bab al-Hawa border crossing for an additional six months, until 13 July. 

Critical need for funding

In 2023, the UN and partners moved more than 5,000 trucks carrying essential aid through the crossings and more than 40 cross-border missions have been carried out since January this year. 

This has allowed us to provide essential aid to 2.5 million people every month and to administer over one million medical procedures,” he said.

Mr. Griffiths underlined the humanitarian community’s commitment to assist people all across Syria but stressed the need for funding. 

He said last year’s Humanitarian Response Plan for the country received less than 40 per cent of the required funding - the smallest total since the start of the conflict.  


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вторник, 27 февраля 2024 г.

Explainer: What is the UN Human Rights Council?


The UN Human Rights Council meets at the Palace of Nations in Geneva. (file)

Explainer: What is the UN Human Rights Council?

UN Photo/Emmanuel Hungrecker
 
The UN Human Rights Council meets at the Palace of Nations in Geneva. (file)


26 February 2024
Human Rights

War crimes, racism, arbitrary detention and rape as a weapon of war: these just a few of the pressing international issues over which the UN Human Rights Council deliberates.

Its new session beginning on Monday is the longest ever, running until April, and promises a packed agenda, with ongoing wars in Gaza, Sudan and Ukraine, the situation of human rights defenders worldwide and more than 50 national human rights records under scrutiny.

But, what does the Human Rights Council do and why does its work matter?

While the 47-member body has been the subject of controversy since its creation in 2006 – including the temporary withdrawal of the United States in 2018 – UN Secretary-General António Guterres has highlighted the crucial role the Council plays in the UN’s human rights architecture, which is “the bedrock of peace”.

What does the Human Rights Council actually do?

In a nutshell, the Geneva-based Council is a multilateral forum for the international community to discuss anything relating to human rights issues around the world.

In addition to launching fact-finding missions and establishing commissions of inquiry into specific situations of concern, it meets three times a year at the Palais des Nations in Switzerland to discuss a wide range of political, civil, economic, social and cultural rights with UN officials, independent experts and investigators, Member States and civil society organizations.

This video explains it all:

How does it work?

The most innovative feature of the Human Rights Council is the universal periodic review. This unique mechanism involves examining the human rights records of all 193 UN Member States once every four years. It’s like a national human rights report card.

The review is a cooperative, State-driven process under the auspices of the Council, which provides the opportunity for each country to present measures taken and challenges to be met to improve the human rights situation at home and to meet their international obligations.

The Council also forms investigative panels to probe violations in specific countries and thematic areas, for instance, the expert mechanism to advance racial justice and equality in law enforcement.

To examine and monitor violations, the Council appoints independent experts including Special Rapporteurs, who act in their individual capacity and do not get any remuneration from the UN for their work. They are sometimes called “the eyes and ears” of the Council.

The Universal Declaration of Human Rights says everyone has a right to education.
© UNICEF/Ahmed Haleem
 
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights says everyone has a right to education.

How does the HRC make a difference for human rights worldwide?

Although human rights have always been a very sensitive matter for Member States, the Human Rights Council remains an essential part of the UN’s human rights architecture.

The Council has the power to adopt resolutions, launch fact-finding missions and investigations and establish commissions of inquiry. In particular, the Council can appoint independent experts on specific issues. For instance, in 2023, the Council appointed the first ever Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Russia and in 2021, it recognized for the first time the right to a clean and safe environment as a human right.

All these mechanisms allow for grave violations to be highlighted and brought on the global stage for examination, discussion and, whenever feasible, action. Such action can change the course of events.

A delegate casts her country's ballot during elections in the General Assembly Hall for new members of the UN Human Rights Council. (file)
UN Photo/Manuel Elías
 
A delegate casts her country's ballot during elections in the General Assembly Hall for new members of the UN Human Rights Council. (file)

Who gets to serve on the Human Rights Council?

Elections to the Council take place annually by secret ballot. Countries serve for three years on a rotational basis, as some of the seats expire on 31 December every year. There are 47 seats, equitably distributed according to five regional divisions.

As it is understood that the Council can only be as effective as its Member States, its election process was placed directly in the hands of the General Assembly, the only UN organ where every one of the 193 countries has equal voting weight.

The geographical group divisions and seat allocations are meant to prevent disproportionate focus on just a handful of regions and countries and ensure that every country is fairly assessed.

It is up to Member States themselves to choose the countries which serve, through election, as opposed to consideration of any individual State’s own human rights record.

Who serves now?

By secret ballot on 10 October 2023, the UN General Assembly elected Albania, Brazil, Bulgaria, Burundi, China, Côte d’Ivoire, Cuba, Dominican Republic, France, Ghana, Indonesia, Japan, Kuwait, Malawi and the Netherlands.

As of 1 January, 15 newly-elected States began serving three-year terms.

Michelle Bachelet, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, speaks at the Human Rights Council in 2018. (file)
UN Photo/Jean-Marc Ferré
 
Michelle Bachelet, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, speaks at the Human Rights Council in 2018. (file)

Here’s what’s happening at the Human Rights Council now

The HRC’s 55th session opens on Monday and runs through 5 April. Steered by president Omar Zniber, it will be attended by the UN Secretary-General, General Assembly president Dennis Francis and High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk alongside top officials from Member States during its high-level segment.

Here’s what you need to know:

  • On 4 March, the High Commissioner will deliver his global update, focusing on the human rights situation in various countries, with particular attention to critical regions.
  • Throughout the session, delegates will discuss numerous thematic and country reports.
  • Topics of discussions will address the situation in Ukraine 
  • Also under the spotlight are Venezuela, Iran, Colombia, and the situation in the Occupied Palestinian Territory.

With the session promising robust discussions and actions aimed at addressing pressing human rights concerns globally, follow UN News coverage of the Human Rights Council’s deliberations here.



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суббота, 24 февраля 2024 г.

Dozens address UN world court hearings on Israeli practices


View of the International Court of Justice courtroom at the start of the public hearings on Israeli practices.

Dozens address UN world court hearings on Israeli practices

© ICJ-CIJ/Frank van Beek
 
View of the International Court of Justice courtroom at the start of the public hearings on Israeli practices.


23 February 2024
Law and Crime Prevention

“Here are the choices: ethnic cleansing, apartheid or genocide,” said Palestine’s foreign minister at the opening of public hearings at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) this week, with a record 52 States and three international organizations providing comments and presentations on a case based on the UN General Assembly’s request for an advisory opinion on legal consequences arising from Israel’s policies and practices in Occupied Palestinian Territory.

Filed before the ongoing four-month-old war in Gaza began, the case has triggered heated commentary even before the court's president, Judge Nawaf Salam, opened the hearings. This recap provides snapshots of the first days of hearings, from 19 to 21 February. The hearings will close on 26 February. Israel chose not to participate.

World court considers two specific questions

The General Assembly submitted two specific questions to the world court in its December 2022 request:

  • “What are the legal consequences arising from the ongoing violation by Israel of the right of the Palestinian people to self-determination, from its prolonged occupation, settlement and annexation of the Palestinian territory occupied since 1967, including measures aimed at altering the demographic composition, character and status of the Holy City of Jerusalem, and from its adoption of related discriminatory legislation and measures?”
  • “How do the policies and practices of Israel affect the legal status of the occupation, and what are the legal consequences that arise for all States and the United Nations from this status?”

Here is what unfolded in the beginning days of the public hearings at the Peace Palace in The Hague.

Foreign Minister Riyad al-Maliki of the Palestinian Authority delivers a presentation at the ICJ on 19 February 2024.
© ICJ-CIJ/Frank van Beek
 
Foreign Minister Riyad al-Maliki of the Palestinian Authority delivers a presentation at the ICJ on 19 February 2024.

Palestine’s plea

Palestine presented its arguments for three hours on 19 February, with Foreign Minister Riyad al-Maliki beginning with these words:

“I stand before you as 2.3 million Palestinians in Gaza, half of them children, are besieged and bombed, killed and maimed, starved and displaced, as more than 3.5 million Palestinians in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, are subjected to colonization of their territory and the racist violence that enables it, as 1.7 million Palestinians in Israel are treated as second class citizens and unwelcomed intruders on their ancestral land, as seven million Palestinian refugees continue to be denied their right to return to their land and home.”

Successive governments in Israel have left only three choices to Palestinians, he said, “displacement, subjugation or death. Here are the choices: ethnic cleansing, apartheid or genocide.”

Calling for “an end to Israel’s impunity”, which is “a moral, political and legal imperative”, he said “our people are here to stay…and they will not forsake their rights.”

Representing South Africa, Vusimuzi Madonsela, presents his country's case against Israel at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in January. (file)
ICJ-CIJ/ Frank van Beek
 
Representing South Africa, Vusimuzi Madonsela, presents his country's case against Israel at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in January. (file)

South Africa describes practices as ‘apartheid’

Representing South Africa, which filed a separate complaint with the ICJ in December against Israel for “genocide in Gaza” – for which the court already issued provisional measures, Vusimuzi Madonsela, the country’s ambassador to the Netherlands, told the court on 20 February that after “decades of apartheid settler colonialism, a just solution for all who legally qualify to live in historical Palestine would need to be negotiated with the assistance of the international community”.

Drawing a parallel between the situation in Palestine and the struggle of South Africans against apartheid, an “institutionalized regime of discriminatory laws”, he said current practices ensure “Israeli-Jewish domination”. In this vein, he called for the “immediate, unconditional and total withdrawal of Israeli troops” from the occupied territories.

From ‘annexation’ to a ‘point of no return’

The Chilean representative said that Israel “neither regards itself nor behaves as a temporary occupant”, and its practices amount to “annexation”. He also recalled that Chile is home to the largest Palestinian community outside the Middle East and a large Jewish community, the third largest in Latin America. 

Meanwhile, representing Algeria, law professor Ahmed Laraba estimated that Israel “aims at a point of no return” in the occupied territories to “discard all possibility of creating a Palestinian State”. He asked the ICJ to put an end to Israel’s “impunity” as an “oppressor” by reminding it of “a law which is not that of revenge, but justice”.

Saudi Arabia’s representative criticized Israel for “the dehumanization” of Palestinians, who are treated as “disposable objects” in Gaza. This situation demonstrates “how the illegality of the Israeli occupation for over more than five decades can degenerate into the ugliest of consequences”, the delegate said, also accusing Israel of “continuing to ignore the provisional measures ordered by the court” as part of the South African complaint on genocide.

Part of a barrier between Israel and the West Bank in Bethlehem. (file)
UN News/Reem Abaza
 
Part of a barrier between Israel and the West Bank in Bethlehem. (file)

Arguing the right to self-defence

Speaking for the Netherlands, René J. M. Lefeber, legal advisor to the Foreign Affairs Ministry, recalled the foundations of the right to self-determination of peoples as well as the legal framework of the “use of force” and the right to self-defence in the event of an attack.

“The occupation of a territory can be legitimate within the framework of the right to self-defence in response to an armed attack” even if that does not come from a State, but from an armed group, he said, also highlighting the obligation to both respect international humanitarian law and put an end to its violations. He expressed hope that the ICJ could contribute to bringing peace to the Middle East.

Sharing borders with both Gazans and Israelis, Egypt challenged Israel’s use of the right to self-defence.

“The argument that a State may exercise self-defence against a territory under its own military occupation and effective control is counter-intuitive,” said Jasmine Moussa, legal advisor to Egypt's Foreign Affairs Minister’s Office, adding that Israel committed a “war of aggression” in 1967 and then continued “decades of occupation” contrary to international law.

“Israel cannot invoke self-defence to maintain a situation created by its own illegal conduct,” she continued, underscoring the seriousness of the current situation, including in Rafah, where “Israel is continuing its policy of mass forcible expulsion of Palestinians civilians, all while the Security Council repeatedly fails to call for a ceasefire in callous disregard for Palestinian life”.

The Middle East region “yearns for peace and stability and a just, comprehensive and lasting resolution of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict based on the principles of international law and the establishment of a viable Palestinian State, on the pre-1967 lines, with East-Jerusalem as its capital”, she said.

Diego Colas, Director of Legal Affairs at the Ministry for Europe and Foreign Affairs of France, said Israel’s “right to defend itself” remains in accordance with international law.

Noting “the very heavy context in which these hearings take place” since the attack carried out by Hamas in Israel on 7 October, he defended “the right of Israel to defend itself and its population with the aim of preventing such attacks from happening again”.

However, this right must be exercised in strict compliance with international law, and in particular, international humanitarian law, he added, reiterating that while Israeli operations and bombings are creating thousands of civilian victims in Gaza, France has clearly, consistently and repeatedly affirmed this demand.

“Respect for international law, in particular international humanitarian law, by all stakeholders is the only possible horizon of peace,” he said.

As of early February, more than 80 per cent of Gaza’s 2.3 million population has been internally displaced since the start of the war in October 2023.
© UNRWA
 
As of early February, more than 80 per cent of Gaza’s 2.3 million population has been internally displaced since the start of the war in October 2023.

Calls for compensation, reparations

Turning to other concerns, France’s representative condemned Israel’s colonization policy, which has accelerated since 2004, as well as comments promoting the installation of colonies in Gaza and the transfer of the Gazan population “out of this territory”, which would constitute “a very serious violation” of international law.

As for reparations, he emphasized that “France considers that this obligation extends to all damage done to the Palestinian population” by proceeding with “restitutions and, failing that, compensation”.

Bolivia, which broke off its relations with Israel on 1 November 2023, denounced a situation of “apartheid” and “atrocities amounting to the crime of genocide” in Gaza. Its representative called for “Israel’s reversal of its illegal settlement policy” in the occupied territories alongside reparations and compensation.

When the hearings continued on 21 FebruaryColombia’s representative said Israel must cease all occupation and colonization and carry out reparations. “Israel has an obligation to compensate, in accordance with the applicable rules of international law, all legal persons having suffered any form of material or immaterial damage as a result of its occupation of the Palestinian territories.”

Qalandia checkpoint between East Jerusalem and Ramallah in the West Bank. (file)
UN News/Shirin Yaseen
 
Qalandia checkpoint between East Jerusalem and Ramallah in the West Bank. (file)

A negotiated two-State solution

Brazil’s representative insisted on the need to move towards a negotiated two-State solution in “one of the most pressing unresolved conflicts on the international agenda since decades”, underlining that the importance of the question and the gravity of the situation were indisputable even before 7 October.

“The tragic events of that date and the disproportionate and indiscriminate military operations that followed, however, show clearly that the mere management of the conflict cannot be considered an option,” the delegate said. “The two-State solution, with an economically viable Palestinian State living side by side with Israel, is the only way to bring peace and security to the Israelis and the Palestinians.”

The United States is in favour of a political settlement within the framework established by the UN, said Richard C. Visek, legal advisor to the Department of State.

Recalling “the horror of the terrorist attacks of 7 October”, he acknowledged the context marked by “the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, which has had severe, widespread and tragic consequences for Palestinian civilians in Gaza”.

He focused his presentation on the fact that stakeholders must return to the framework set by the Security Council and the UN General Assembly to resolve the conflict – a two-State solution – and highlighted the ICJ’s role in preserving this framework so as to make a negotiated solution a realistic possibility.

For its part, US efforts aim not only to address the current crisis, but “to get beyond where we have been, namely to advance a political settlement that will lead to a durable peace in the region that includes lasting security for Israeli and Palestinian and a path to Palestinian statehood”.

Palestinian farmers harvest olives with an Israeli settlement in the background. (file)
UNRWA Archives/Alaa Ghosheh
 
Palestinian farmers harvest olives with an Israeli settlement in the background. (file)

International law is not an ‘à la carte menu’

Cuba’s representative extended its criticism to the United States, asking the world court to consider Washington’s “complicity” in Israeli policies, including in the supply of weapons to Israel.

“International law cannot be an à la carte menu; it must apply equally to all,” said Lana Nusseibeh, Assistant Minister for Political Affairs of the Permanent Representation of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) to the UN.

End the occupation: Russia

“The occupation must come to an end,” said Vladimir Tarabrin, Russia’s ambassador to the Netherlands, advocating for a two-State negotiated solution and pointing to both the “persistent denial by Israel to the right of self-determination” and “the colonization policy pursued by Israel since 1967”.

He said more than 700,000 Israeli settlers live in the West Bank, including Jerusalem, and Israel’s settlement activities gained record-breaking speed in 2023, according to the latest report of the UN Secretary-General on the matter, which noted that plans for more than 24,700 housing units were advanced, approved or tendered – more than double the figure from the previous year.

“This has effectively undermined the prospects of a negotiated solution,” he said, adding that Russia hopes the ICJ can contribute to a solution to the conflict by stipulating that both parties “are under the obligation” to resume peace negotiations.

 

What is the UN world court?

The International Court of Justice (ICJ) is the principal judicial organ of the UN, established in 1945.

  • The court’s role is to settle, in accordance with international law, legal disputes submitted to it by States and to give advisory opinions on legal questions referred to it by authorized UN organs and specialized agencies.
  • The court is composed of 15 judges, elected for nine-year terms of office by the 193 Member States of the UN General Assembly and the 15-member Security Council.
  • Read more about the UN world court in our explainer here.


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